She then hid his body and pretended he had gone missing, sparking a massive search.

She got 11 years for culpable homicide and is despised by fellow inmates in the Stirling jail because of her crime.

The Record told in December how staff had moved Adekoya to a “cushy” unit called Wallace House after she complained that threatening letters calling her a beast and a child-beater had been left outside her cell.

As well as a cell with an ensuite shower and her own key, Adekoya was also given a sought-after job in the prison kitchen.

It wasn’t the first time Adekoya was accused of getting special treatment. One ex-inmate said in 2014: “She’s protected by the officers, like all the beasts.”

Burly Mackenzie, 53, got life with a minimum of 15 years for murdering Margaret Borris, 39, in Paisley in 2008.

Margaret had children by Mackenzie’s boy-friend, whose dog got hurt while she was walking it.

Enraged, Mackenzie drove over Margaret in her VW Polo, leaving her with 73 injuries.

Wilson, 38, started a drunken row with customers at a pub in South Queensferry, then summoned her drug-dealing thug boyfriend Jack Mallon to attack them.

Mallon fatally stabbed joiner Jordan Mackay, 20, in the neck. He was jailed for life with a minimum term of 19 years.

Wilson was also caged, for nine years, for culpable homicide. The judge told her: “Your behaviour was the trigger for the events that led to the murder.”

The Scottish Prison Service said they did not discuss individual inmates.